Recordings of each module are accessible here on the Brown Physics YouTube channel. (Last year's modules can be viewed here.)
This 4-day Winter School is open to interested graduate students, post-doctoral researchers and advanced undergraduates from any institution. Each module and following workshop are intended to stand alone; participants may sign up for as many modules as they choose.
All modules will take place virtually. There is no registration fee.
The goal of this Winter School is to offer examples of the direct applications of machine learning methods to a range of problems inspired by the use of artificial intelligence in physics. We will provide hands-on experiences with machine learning tools to help reduce the barriers to engagement with these essential tools for physics research.
Hosted by the Brown Center for the Fundamental Physics of the Universe, this year's program will consist of six modules comprised of a lecture session delivered by Brown Physics faculty members and industry experts, followed by practice workshop sessions for participants with direction in the use of machine learning tools.
To learn more about the graduate programs in Physics at Brown, please visit the Physics Department website.
Roundtable discussion: "What do we need AI to be capable of to really propel physics forward?"
Featuring: Jim Halverson (Northeastern University), Max Tegmark (MIT), and Kyle Cranmer (University of Wisconsin-Madison); moderated by Richard Gaitskell (Brown University).
Registration with a Gmail or Google-backed email account is required for full access to all AI Winter School materials including notebooks. Please note that we will use your registration email address to grant access to all materials. Full access to all materials will be available starting January 12. The AI School will make use of Google Colab for all the workbook examples (https://colab.research.google.com/).
If you do not have a Gmail or Google-backed account, you will need to register one. You can create an account just for this event or perhaps follow the directions at the following link to use an existing email.
NOTE: Module hands-on material will be on a Google shared drive. Access to this shared drive will be granted to those that have registered through this Indico site with their GMail or Google-backed email account. Due to the high level of interest this year, registrants will be granted this access via a dedicated Google group to which their registered email will be added. Access to the shared drive will not be given directly to any registrant's individual account. If you did not register with a GMail or Google-backed account, please modify or re-register through this site with a GMail or Google-backed account. If you just registered, please allow a little time for your registered email to be propagated to the Google group.
The Shared Google Drive will continue to be made available beyond the end of the School so there is no need to copy all the contents. Just your working notebook.
The time zone for the school will only be the US East Coast time zone.
An invite link provided here to the to Support Slack.
If you chose to use any of the material from this workshop in your own examples, or workbooks, please make a reference back to our workshop, url, and organizers:
AI Winter School - The Center for the Fundamental Physics of the Universe / Department of Physics, Brown University
https://indico.physics.brown.edu/e/AIWinterSchool2025
Organizing faculty: Richard Gaitskell, Director; Ian Dell'Antonio, Associate Director